distance shooting is a very crude way to evaluate a bow's performance if you don't know the arrows. Not hitting a distance you aim for doesn't necessarily mean your bow is (too) slow.
A helical fletching versus a straight fletching makes a lot of difference. When I try both on otherwise identical arrows, the straight fletched easily go 20-30 m further.
In addition, the smoothness of the arrow can also make a difference. If you stick to a particular set of arrows for distance shooting, you'll be able to compare performance among your bows.
The moment I used carbon arrows instead of my own bamboo shafts, I shot 20 m further than I was used to, although when chronographed (which is of course at short range) the initial velocity was similar. Suddenly, I started to get distances you expect from reading what others report with bows of similar poundage and speed, but which I could never achieve with my helically fletched home-made bamboo arrows.
Also, the angle should be just under 45° (folks, correct me if I'm wrong; in vacuum 45° would be optimal, but I thought that in real air you need to aim just below that because friction causes the arrow to lose speed, yielding an asymmetric flight path).
And give us some pics please :-)
Joachim